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The 5.5. years on your most recent visa. How come you have a '5.5 year' ancestry visa?? They are only issued for 5 years.Question 7.13--asks how long we have lived in the UK for. In total it is 11 years---5.5 years from 2004-2009, and then we had 2.5 years back in Australia, and then another 5.5 years from 2012-present. We are applying because we qualify for the 2nd stint (5 years continuous living in the UK) however it seems strange to not include the initial stay even though that's not what we are applying under. The next part of that question then asks about absences of over 6 months, which we would then have to include. So my question is---do we answer 5.5 years or 11? I am basing this on Section 6's Questions 6.1 and 6.2 asking specifically only about the period of which the application is based, whereas Section 7 is asking for total stay?
Family is fine, but elaborate a bit more on direct family members, i.e. mother/father/siblings.-Question 7.14 asks about social, cultural or family ties and it says ''tell us about any....'', is it enough to just write 'family' or does it have to be more specific---which family, etc.
6 months. It is 'premium service' not 'express service' and it is not an interview.-Evidence of Finances---how far back should statements go? Is 3 months enough? Also, we have a savings account that belongs to both my partner and I however it is only his name on the account. We put money in there from our joint account monthly. I would like to be able to include statements from that account, but not sure if I can (our joint one is fine as we just co-sign, but the savings one I feel like I would have to sign the bit saying he is 'supporting me financially' but that's not the case. I guess if we are doing the Express service, I can bring it, and ask them on the day?
Correct.-12H UK Ancestry section asks for documents showing we are able to work and intend to take/seek employment. As we have been living here for 5.5 years as PAYE or self-employed, would we just include payslips and company accounts as proof we are working and assumedly plan to continue to work?
-Am I correct that when it comes to documents, it is asking us to provide not just originals but copies of all of them, including photocopies of every passport page that has relevant info (stamps and info pages)?
Set(O) changed in October last year and a couple of days ago for online applications.Do you know if the forms changed from the 04/2017 version to now? That's the one I am currently filling out.
If you plan on registering her as British, she DOES NOT need apply for ILR. Once you are granted ILR you can registerher as British on form MN1 under Sectin 1(3) of the nationality act, which is an entitlement to register as British as she was born in the UK. She also did not require a visa if you had no plans to travel out of the UK.Our daughter was born in the UK March 2016 but from what we understand she is not eligible for British citizenship as both parents are Australian citizens on Ancestry visas, so she has to be our dependent on whatever visa we have. She is currently on 'Dependent Leave to Remain', so we assume she will also need to get ILR Dependent, as her visa ends when ours does. Have we assumed correctly?
I didn't realise you could apply online---can I still use the premium service for online applications?
Yes, she will be considered British otherwise than by descent, ie. can be passed onto her children if born anywhere in the world. See Citizenship FAQs (click) and you can apply for citizenship and passport in the joint application scheme through NCS at the council.I had no idea about our daughter! That is fantastic! Thank-you! That saves us so much time (and money!). I thought I had researched it thoroughly but obviously not! So once we are granted ILR, we can simply register her as British because she was born here---does that mean she is considered a citizen after that?
Yes. You will also need the separate fee leaflet you get with the passport application if you are applying for both at the same time.In regards to the MN1 form, I took a look at it and it seemed quite confusing, however I did read the guidance notes, but just to confirm:
A) There was no payment form attached, so how do you know how much it costs? Do we use this form? https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... t_2017.pdf
Yes.B) We do not have to fill in Section 2 as she was born in the UK.
No.C) We do not have to fill in Section 3 as she was born in the UK.
As you found out, no premium service for citizenship applications. NCS give you all your originals back so yes you will be able to travel.Is it possible to use a premium service for this one as well? From reading other threads, timeframes have said it could take 3-6 months but we really can't have her unable to travel for that long. It does look like if we use the NCS service, they can certify docs so we can keep originals (so I assume this means passport too), which means we may get away with traveling within Europe with her (we did that once when she was 6 months old by accident before we realised we needed to get her a visa too). But if we can use a premium service, that would be preferable.
Yes, it is only completing the form and not actually applying. Remember, we cannot see the online form so any questions you ask will take a while for an answer as we base our responses on the paper forms, which are different to the online ones. The link I provided in my first response to your post is based on the paper form.From reading a few more threads, the online application is just filling it out online and printing it as opposed to actually APPLYING online, is that right? I tried to find where one would apply online (as in the latter) but I couldn't see anything. Do you have a link? In any case, I'll make sure I have the most recent one, so thank-you.